Asynchronous readout array

ABSTRACT

An imaging device is disclosed, the device comprising a pixelated array of semiconductor elements, in which each detecting element is electrically connected to an integrated circuit, the integrated circuit comprising a passive signal path and an active signal path. The passive path provides consecutive frame imaging and the active path detects the location of transient events. The device further comprising a readout decoder block, the readout decoder block controlling operation of the passive paths. Additionally, the device comprises of an address arbitration control block, the address arbitration control block controlling operation of the active paths, wherein the address arbitration control block readout of the active paths are independent of readout of the integrated signal readout from the passive paths.

REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application claims priority of U.S. Provisional Application No.62/040,623, filed on Aug. 22, 2014, and U.S. Provisional Application No.62/065,508 filed on Oct. 17, 2014.

STATEMENT OF GOVERNMENT INTEREST

This invention was made with government support under contractFA8650-13-C-1501 and FA8651-13-C-0021 awarded by the Air Force ResearchLaboratory. The government has certain rights in the invention.

TECHNICAL FIELD OF THE DISCLOSURE

The present disclosure relates in general to imaging devices. Thedisclosure relates in particular to semiconductor imaging devicescapable of both passive imaging and transient event detection, suchevents as those created by laser pulses.

DISCUSSION OF BACKGROUND ART

Photosensitive semiconductor based optical imagers are commonplace. In asemiconductor based imager, an array of pixels each comprise of aphotosensitive junction or photodetector. When a photon with sufficientenergy is incident upon and absorbed in the structure an electron-holepair is created. To read resultant current from absorbed photons anamplifier is required. In CMOS devices an active pixel sensor (APS) hasan integrated circuit for each pixel in the sensor with thephotosensitive junction and amplifier built within the same material. Inultraviolet and infrared devices a readout integrated circuit (ROIC) iscommonly used, where the photodetector and ROIC are made on differentmaterials, then bonded.

In order to achieve dual mode functionality within a pixel, such asclassic frame rate imaging and high frequency events, advanced APS orROIC designs must be implemented. One such design is described in U.S.Pat. No. 6,864,965 wherein a switching control allows either readouthigh resolution at low frame rate or readout of reduced resolution athigh frame rates.

Another such apparatus is described in U.S. Publication [US 20120261553A1] wherein an ROIC is provided which allows for switching betweendifferent detection modes. One of the disclosed modes allows fordetection of a thermal image and detection of a short laser pulse in acommonly shared readout path. This mode enables capture of a passiveimage and location of laser events as every frame is readout. Thisapplication relates to another approach.

SUMMARY OF THE DISCLOSURE

The present disclosure is directed to imaging devices. In one aspect, animaging device in accordance with the present disclosure comprises of apixelated array of semiconductor detector elements, in which eachdetecting element is electrically connected to an integrated circuit,the integrated circuit comprising a passive signal path and an activesignal path. The passive path provides consecutive frame imaging and theactive path detects the location of transient events. The device furthercomprising a readout decoder block, the readout decoder blockcontrolling operation of the passive paths. Additionally the devicecomprises of an address arbitration control block, the addressarbitration control block controls operation of the active paths,wherein the address arbitration control block readout of the activepaths is independent of readout of the passive paths.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute apart of the specification, illustrate preferred embodiments of thepresent disclosure. The drawings together with the general descriptiongiven above and the detailed description of preferred methods andembodiment given below, serve to explain principles of the presentdisclosure.

FIG. 1 is a plan view, schematically illustrating a imaging device, thedevice comprises of a pixelated array of semiconductor detectorelements, wherein each detecting element is electrically connected to anintegrated circuit, the integrated circuit comprising a passive signalpath and an active signal path, a readout decoder block, the readoutdecoder block controlling operation of the passive paths, and an addressarbitration control block, the address arbitration control blockcontrolling operation of the active paths, wherein the active pathreadout is independent of the passive path readout.

FIG. 2 is an electrical diagram of the integrated circuit of a pixel inthe pixel array.

FIG. 3 is a plan view of the dual mode imaging device as that seen inFIG. 1, wherein a single row of pixels is exemplified.

FIG. 4 is a plan view of the dual mode imaging device wherein theaddress arbitration control block comprises of a plurality ofsub-arbitrators.

FIG. 5 is a plan view of the device from FIG. 1, further comprising acontroller.

FIG. 6A is an electrical diagram of a constant fraction discriminator.

FIG. 6B is an electrical diagram of a differentiating zero crossingdiscriminator.

FIG. 7 is a graph showing the quantum efficiency of indium phosphide.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE DISCLOSURE

Referring now to the drawings, wherein like components are designated bylike reference numerals. Methods and embodiments of the presentdisclosure are described further herein below.

FIG. 1 schematically illustrates a dual mode imaging device 10A. Device10A comprises of a pixelated array 12. Each pixel individually iselectrically connected to an integrated circuit. The integrated circuitcomprises of a passive and an active path. The passive path is operatedby a readout decoder block. The readout decoder block comprises of anoutput port 14, a row decoder 18, and a column decoder 16. Passive pathoutput port 14 may be an analog output or may include ananalog-to-digital converter, whereby parallel or serial digital data isoutput from the port. The passive path allows imaging frame rates atabout 60 frames per second.

The active path is operated by the address arbitration control block.The address arbitration control block comprises of a row digital outputport 23, a column digital output port 20, a row arbitrator 24, and acolumn arbitrator 22. Readout of the active path to other circuitry isvia row digital output port 23, column output port 20, or combinationsthereof as will be discussed further hereinbelow. The digital outputports output row and column information which can be multiplexed toprovide the address information. Output port 23 attached to rowarbitrator 24 and column out port 20 is attached to column arbitrator22. The active path detects transient events and provides addressinformation of those events. The address information along with temporalcharacteristics allow for asynchronous detection, location, andfrequency characteristics of transient events, such as laser pulses. Theactive path and passive path each have dedicated readout, allowingsimultaneous passive imaging and active laser detection withasynchronous detection and readout. The pixel array and integratedcircuit are discussed in detail further hereinbelow.

Pixelated array 12 is made from a photosensitive semiconductor materialreferred herein as photodetector material. The photodetector can be madefrom any photosensitive semiconductor material which can be pixelated,non-limiting examples include germanium (Ge), indium gallium arsenide(InGaAs), indium antimonide (InSb), indium phosphide (InP), mercurycadmium telluride (HgCdTe), silicon (Si) and all crystalline variationsof those listed. Each semiconductor type has spectral response whichallows detection at various spectral bands from x-ray to infrared.Spectral response of the photodetector materials can be extended ormodified by implementation coating and scintillators. Coating includeantireflection coating, reflection coating, bandpass, bandstop,shortpass, longpass, notch, and other such spectral filtering andcombinations thereof. Scintillators allow up-converting ordown-converting of otherwise undetectable wavelengths to wavelengthsdetectable to the particular photodetector material.

One preferred photodetector material is indium gallium arsenide (InGaAs)with spectral sensitivity from about 900 nanometers (nm) to about 1700nm. Utilizing InGaAs allows for passive imaging in the near infraredregion for low light imaging and allows detection of NIR laser such asneodymium-doped yttrium aluminum garnet (Nd:YAG) at 1064 nm or Er:Glasslaser at 1535 nm, or any laser that emits in the NIR, including the socalled “eyesafe” spectral ranges longer than 1300 nm, where theradiation is less of an ocular hazard.

When the photodetector material is made from ultraviolet, near-infrared,or infrared sensitive semiconductor material, other than silicon, aseparate readout integrated circuit (ROIC) must be manufactured andattached to the pixel array using such methods as solder bump bondhybridization. If the photodetector material is silicon, then thecircuit can be integrated within the silicon, referred generally asactive pixel sensors (APS), although silicon based devices can also usea separate integrated circuit. The ROIC or the APS can be manufacturedwith well-known silicon based photolithography techniques such as thosedeveloped in CMOS technology.

FIG. 2 is an example electrical diagram of the integrated circuits ofthe present disclosure. Here, one of the photosensitive pixels in thepixel array is represented by a photodiode 30. By way of example, duringoperation, photodiode 30 is illuminated and provides current flowingthrough a passive path 32. The direct current and slow current changesare detected by the passive path and fast current changes are detectedthrough the active path.

The passive path provides the imaging device with the about 60 framerate image. Passive path 32 has a slow charge integrator 34, a noisereduction circuit 46, a sampling circuit 55 and a readout circuit 59.Here, the slow charge integrator is a capacitor transimpedance amplifier(CTIA), although other designs could be implemented such as sourcefollower detector per detector (SFD) or direct injection (DI). Here,CTIA 34 consists of an amplifier 36, in parallel with, a capacitor 38, aswitch 40 in series with a capacitor 42, and a reset switch 44. Switch40 allows increased capacitance in parallel with amplifier 36, therebydecreasing gain of the amplifier and increasing the well capacity of thepixel. CTIA 34 is sufficiently fast to provide image frame of about 60frames per second but slow enough not to react to fast current changessuch as those induced by a laser pulses incident on the photodiode.

A Noise reduction circuit 46 employs correlated double sampling (CDS).Noise reduction circuit 46 has a capacitor 48 in series with thefollowing parallel components: an amplifier 50, a capacitor 52 and aswitch 54. Sampling circuit 55 has a switch 56 and a hold capacitor 58.Closing switch 56 passes to CTIA 34 output to hold capacitor 58. Openingswitch 56 isolates the signal on hold capacitor 58 from the rest of thecircuit. A readout circuitry 59 has a buffer 60, and a switch 62. Thereadout circuit delivers the signal when row select switch 62 is closedvia clocking signals sent from the readout decoder block. When thecolumn is selected via clocking signals from the column decoder, node 63reads out.

Here the readout routine is standard raster scan readout of the passivepath, as will be described operationally further hereinbelow. Theparticular CDS shown is exemplary of an active CDS, but passive CDS canbe implemented without departing from the present disclosure. Likewiseeither integrate then read (ITR) or integrate while read (IWR) routinescan be implemented.

An active path 64 has a AC coupling capacitor 66, a continuous resetCTIA circuit 68, a discriminator 74, a latch circuit 86, and a digitalflag readout circuit 96. Coupling capacitor 66 prevents slow changingcurrent to pass, yet allows fast current changes to pass, such as thoseinduced by laser pulses. Continuous reset circuit 68 has a capacitor 70,a resistor 71, and an amplifier 72.

A discriminator 74 has a capacitor 78, a switch 80, a amplifier 82, acalibration input 84 and a voltage threshold 76. Voltage threshold 76 isa user input which can be changed according to the pulse event strengthand noise of the system. The voltage threshold is preferably above thenoise floor, thereby preventing false triggers and low enough to triggerwhen actual laser pulses are incident on photodiode 30. Switch 80 andcalibration input 84 are used to calibrate the discriminator, measuringand applying the amplifier offset across capacitor 78. When an eventoccurs above the calibrated threshold the amplifier 82 provides digitaloutput to a latch circuit 86.

Latch circuit 86 receives the digital output from the discriminator andlatches to indicate a laser event. Latch circuit has a NAND gate 88 withoutput to a NAND gate 90. NAND gate 90 and a NAND gate 92 are configuredin a cross-coupled configuration resulting in a set-reset latchoperation. A reset signal 94 is provided by the column arbitration andprovides a signal to both NAND gate 88 and NAND gate 92 allowing resetof the latch circuit, independent of the discriminator output. When alaser event occurs the latch circuit holds thereby flagging the digitalflag readout logic circuit, which in turn indicates readout request ofthe address arbitration control block.

Digital flag readout logic circuit has a row request 100 and a columnrequest 102. Row request 100, an open drain circuit, is flagged byclosing a transistor logic 98. Column request 102, another open draincircuit, is flagged by closing a transistor logic 104 and a transistorlogic 108. The hold signal from the latch closes transistor logic 98thereby flagging row request 100. Flagging row request 100 providestemporal information of the event. When the row arbitration decoder seesthe flagged row request it performs a row read 106 which closestransistor logic 104, thereby flagging for a column flag readout. Afterthe row readout and column readout the location of the pixel is known.

The combination of the active path and the passive path allows for asimultaneous imaging and transient event detection. The passive pathcontinually rasters providing an image, while the active pathasynchronously detects transient events and asynchronously reads out theaddress information. With collection of the two sets of data, the imageand transient events can be overlaid on a display or otherwise logicallycorrespond in output data. The amplifiers of the integrated circuit canbe changed via a controller, or shut off, either to conserve energy ordisable unwanted pixels. Asynchronous readout of both the active and thepassive path will be described further below.

FIG. 3 is a plan view of an imaging device 10B wherein a single row isillustrated for purposes of explaining the passive and active pathreadout. During operation column decoder 16 and row decoder 18 read outrows of pixels in a raster pattern 108. Timing of the raster readout isclocked by activating a row, then sequentially activating the column,reading each pixel individually. While the row and column decoder arereading out the passive signals or the pixel is integrating, active pathrow arbitrator is awaiting a flagged row request. At any point duringpassive imaging a laser pulse or other fast temporal or transient eventthat occurs will cause a row request in the active path. Here, anexemplary pixel 112 in a row 110 is shown with an incident event 114. Asdescribed above, pixel 112 will flag 100 with a row request causing atoken 116 to be generated. Alternatively, the row arbitration can becyclically sequenced. Token 116 continuously advances through rowarbitrator 24 until the token reaches a row request 120 of the flaggedrow. After a valid row address is found the row address is readout. Therow arbitration then selects the row for readout using row flag readsignal 106. The row readout will flag 102 with column request,activating column arbitrator 22. Column arbitrator 22 creates a token126 that advances through the columns until valid column address 124 isfound and readout. After the address is found and validated the flag isreset 94 to enable detection of another laser pulse on the pixel. Ifthere are multiple neighboring pixels, for instance, if the laser spotspanned multiple pixels, each pixel address would be sequentiallyreadout.

The active path arbitrators advance at a rate of about a couple hundredpicoseconds per row or column. The timing jitter depends on the scantime of the device, which in turn depends on the pixel array size. Ifonly one pixel is flagged in a 640 by 512 InGaAs array the maximum timeto scan the array and locate the flag is about 40 ns. Determination ofarrival time can be compensated by the location of the signaling pixelbecause the digital arbitration is deterministic. For instance if tokensare always sent from one end of the row, or the column, then uncertaintyin the arrival time can be adjusted based on the location of the pixelfrom the end of the column, or the row, allowing for calibrated timestamps. In addition to spatial compensation, various tree andhierarchical decoder and arbitration configurations can also increasereadout speed and accuracy as is known in the art.

FIG. 4 is a plan view illustrating an example of different arbitrationconfigurations. FIG. 4 illustrates a device 10C, similar to the deviceas that shown in FIG. 1, except row arbitrator 24 and column arbitrator22 each comprise of a plurality of sub-arbitrators. Here, row arbitrator24 comprises of a sub-arbitrator 24A, 24B, 24C, and 24D. Columnarbitrator 22 comprises of a sub-arbitrator 22A, 22B, 22C, and 22D.Pixel array 12 is subdivided into four areas 12A, 12B, 12C, and 12D. Rowsub-arbitrator 24A and column sub-arbitrator 22A service pixel area 12A.Row sub-arbitrator 24B and column sub-arbitrator 22B service pixel area12B. Row sub-arbitrator 24C and column sub-arbitrator 22C service pixelarea 12C. Row sub-arbitrator 24D and column sub-arbitrator 22D servicepixel area 12D. Operation of each pixel area is substantially the sameas described above within each pixel area. In the current configuration,subdividing the arbitration allows for a reduced arbitration area ofabout 25% and therefore a decrease in jitter time associated withscanning the entire area. The particular configuration, wherein each rowand column arbitrator is located next to their serviced pixel area,allows the shortest electrical path from pixel area to arbitrators. Eachof the pixel areas are readout asynchronous from another, allowing formultiple transient event detection and readout. Such a configurationscan be advantageous when multiple transient events are present in thefield of view of the imaging device.

Similarly, the passive decoder can be subdivided for increased readoutspeed of the entire array. As the passive decoder is clocked, thereadout can increase in speed about the same ratio as the area isdecreased. For instance, dividing the scanning into 4 areas increasesthe readout of the entire array by about four times.

FIG. 5 illustrates a device 10D. Device 10D has the same elements as thedevice shown in FIG. 1 and additionally comprises of a controller 128, apassive control logic 130, and an active control logic 132. The passivecontrol logic and the active control logic can be characterized as partthe readout scanner block and address arbitration control blockrespectively. Here, pixels in a pixel area 134 and a pixel area 136 areexemplified for explanatory purposes. Addition of controller 128 allowsadvanced functionality of the device such as faster passive framing incertain regions of the pixel array by reading out the passive image inonly a subset of the pixels. For instance, if a transient event 135 isdetected within one of the pixels in pixel area 134, then controller 128can modify the passive control logic 130 such that the start and stoppixels in the raster are a pixel 134A and a pixel 134B, respectively.This reduced area or region-of-interest can be read out at a fasterrate. In this configuration the passive image readout would be limitedto pixel area 134, while the active paths would continue toasynchronously operate. If another transient event 137 is detected atanother pixel area 136, then a second region-of-interest couldoptionally read out with the raster a start and a stop pixels 136A and136B, respectively.

The controller is on-chip logic which can be integrated within thedevice circuitry. The controller can be characterized as a digitalintegrated circuit, microprocessor, microcontroller, processor, ordigital signal processor. The controller can be fixed or fieldprogrammable.

The controller also allows logical coupling with other optic devices.For example, a laser or laser designator operation can be coupled withthe device with the controller. For ranging information the controllercan coordinate the emission of a laser pulse with the active pathreceipt of a laser pulse. For use as a laser rangefinder, controller 128can use the signal from column flag event line 102 in the active path ofa pixel, as shown in FIG. 2 and FIG. 3, to provide a time-to-digitalcircuit 140 with a receipt reflection from an object while alsoobtaining the address.

For more accurate ranging data or temporal data the signal readout mustbe quick. In order to achieve faster readout, the signal from rowrequest 100 can be used bypassing the column readout, this allows fasterresponse, but if more than one pixel in the array detects a transientevent the ranging information may not be traceable to the exact pixel.Alternatively, the signal from the discriminator can be fanned outdirectly from the discriminator circuit output to a time-to-digitalconverter. Fanning out of the pixels or a portion of the pixels allowsthe signal to bypass the rest of the circuitry which provides addressdata, but increases temporal accuracy. In practice routing constraintsallow only a portion of the pixels can be fanned out. In thisconfiguration the temporal data will be the most accurate.

In addition to controlling the passive region-of-interest and activepath ranging, the controller can change integration time of the passivepixels. For instance the integration time of the pixels can be stoppedearly or started later for shortened integration times. This techniquecan be useful when imaging through semi-transparent media andobscurations. For instance obscurations such as rain, clouds, fog,smoke, dust, and certain glasses can saturate the passive imager duringintegration periods. Illuminating the area with wavelengths transparentor semi-transparent to such obscurations, yet still detectable by thephotodetector material, allow imaging through the obscurations. Byshortening the integration time, less of the unwanted background noisefrom the obscurations will be detected and with sufficient illumination,objects and scene data imagery can be obtained. In addition, ranginginformation which identifies objects through the obscurations canprovide feedback for the controller to adjust the integration time basedon the distance to the target and illumination.

In either of the aforementioned configurations and methods,implementation of a more accurate discriminator circuit will reducerange walk error of return signals. Range walk error is the errorassociated with signals of various amplitude. FIG. 6A and FIG. 6B aretwo possible circuits which can be employed in the discriminator circuitshown in FIG. 2 to reduce range walk error. When using a simplethreshold discriminator, pulses of different amplitudes trigger atdifferent positions of the rising edge which lead to time-of-arrivalerrors. For example, a larger signal may trigger before a smaller signalin a simple threshold discriminator since the rising edge approaches thethreshold voltage sooner than a smaller signal.

FIG. 6A is an example of a constant fraction discriminator (CFD). TheCFD circuit triggers based on the constant fraction of the total peakheight. This allows triggering independent from the peak amplitudethereby giving more accurate timing and reducing range walk. The pulsesignal enters the CFD circuit at 140. If the pulse voltage is at athreshold 143, then a leading edge discriminator 142 will trigger. Thesignal also enters an attenuator 144 in parallel with both a signaldelay 146 and an inverting amplifier 148. Both the attenuated signal andinverted signal are input to a summation block 150 such that a constantbipolar signal is produced regardless of the amplitude of the originalpulse. The bipolar signal is gated with the output of a discriminator142 in a logic 152.

FIG. 6B is an example of a zero cross discriminator D2. The zero crossdiscriminator has leading edge discriminator 142 will trigger as long asthe signal is over threshold 143, similar to that shown in FIG. 6A. Inparallel, a first amplifier 156 differentiates the charge accumulated bythe signal, and then a second differentiator 158 takes the secondderivative. The second derivative provides a zero crossing correspondingwith the peak of the original pulse. The zero crossing signal is gatedwith the output of a discriminator 142 in a logic 160.

Other methods to increase spectral performance of the device, inaddition to the aforementioned material types, coating, andscintillators, is based on the material thickness. The thickness of thephotodetector material will have an effect on the spectral range of theimaging device based on the photodetector absorption length. Backthinning or wafer removal techniques allow for increased spectralresponse for materials which have a short absorption length in thedesired spectral range. Alternatively, thick substrates are desirablewhen the absorption length of the photodetector material is long. By wayof example, FIG. 7 shows a graph G1, which contains quantum efficiencycurves of InGaAs. The indium phosphide (InP) substrate can be thinnedfrom the InGaAs array causing spectral response extension to shorterwavelengths. Back thinning extends the short wavelength response fromabout 900 nm to about 500 nm, which allows response to different scenespectral content and detection of additional laser wavelengths. A InPwafer quantum efficiency (QE) spectra 162 is shown as the dashed linewith quantum efficiency from about 900 nm to about 1700 nm. A backthinned InP QE spectra 164 has extended quantum efficiency to about 500nm. Likewise, silicon can be back-thinned for increased ultravioletresponse.

Additional techniques to increase performance of the device is reductionof noise. Noise can be reduced by implementing pixel disable logic andcooling. Pixel disable logic allows noisy pixels to be eliminated fromreading out. Cooling decreases dark current of the photodetectormaterial. Cooling can be achieved by heat exchangers such as fins, fans,thermoelectric coolers (TEC), coolant pumping, or reservoirs carryingcolds liquids, such as a liquid nitrogen dewar. For instance, whenInGaAs photodetector material is used with thermoelectric cooling (TEC),or other equivalent cooling methods, dark current noise is decreased byabout half with every 7° of cooling.

The disclosed imaging device has a variety of useful application. Ingeneral it can be used in any application in which normal frame rateimage and a transient event must be located. Specific applicationsinclude imaging of laser pointers, rangefinding, and detection offriendly and hostile target designator presence, while simultaneouslycollecting imaging information. The passive and active image can bedisplayed on a monitor, overlapping the data from each. In oneimplementation the imaging device can be coupled with a laser pointer ordesignator and provide position feedback to the object targeted by alaser pulse. Likewise, the imaging device can be used to coordinatetarget handoff from person to person or vehicle to vehicle. The imagingdevice can also provide feedback for laser pointer or laser designatoroptical stabilization. Timing resolution of the imaging device is fineenough to discriminate pulse repetition frequency (PRF) codes andprovide sufficient resolution to obtain ranging information when pairedwith a controller and time-of-flight circuitry.

From the description of the present disclosure provided herein oneskilled in the art can design the imaging devices in accordance with thepresent disclosure. For instance one skilled in the art could use SPICEsoftware to simulate and verify designed circuitry. Other designsoftware and chip layout with software is available from a variety ofsuppliers such as Cadence Design Systems, Tanner EDA, Silvaco, Inc.,Synopsys, Inc., and Mentor Graphics Corp. Coordination of design andfabrication can be accomplished at any commercial semiconductorintegrated circuit fab, integrated device manufacturers, or pure-playsemiconductor foundries.

While the present disclosure has been described in terms of particularphotodetector materials, circuitry, and operational logic, others can beimplemented without departing from the disclosure. In summary, thepresent invention is described above in terms of particular embodiments.The invention, however, is not limited to the embodiments described anddepicted herein. Rather, the invention is limited only by the claimsappended hereto.

What is claimed is:
 1. A dual mode electro-optical radiation imagingdevice, the device comprising: a pixelated array of semiconductordetector elements, in which each detecting element is electricallyconnected to an integrated circuit, the integrated circuit comprising apassive signal path and an active signal path, wherein the active signalpath triggers readout upon transient event detection; a readout decoderblock, the readout decoder block controlling operation of the passivepaths; and an address arbitration control block, the address arbitrationcontrol block controlling readout and operation of the active path,wherein the address arbitration control block operates independent andasynchronous to the readout of the passive path, and wherein transientevent detection initiates the identification of the location of andreadout of the signaling active path.
 2. The device of claim 1, whereinthe pixelated array is made from indium gallium arsenide (InGaAs). 3.The device of claim 1, wherein the pixelated array is made from silicon.4. The device of claim 3, wherein the device circuits and detectorelements are made within the same substrate.
 5. The device of claim 1,wherein the pixelated array is thinned to less than 500 micronsthickness and optical radiation enters the device from the side oppositefrom that containing circuits.
 6. The device of claim 1, wherein thedevice provides gain to the optical signal through an impact ionizationprocess within the detector material.
 7. The device of claim 1, whereinthe circuits of the device are fabricated using CMOS processing.
 8. Thedevice of claim 1, wherein the active path integrated circuitry isoptimized for detecting signals generated by pulsed electro-opticalradiation sources, including lasers.
 9. The device of claim 1, whereinthe active path signal path is optimized for detecting electro-opticalpulses from an x-ray source.
 10. The device of claim 1, wherein theactive path detection threshold level is adjustable.
 11. The device ofclaim 1, wherein the address arbitration control block outputs theaddress representing the centroid of a group of adjacent pixelsdetecting events.
 12. The device of claim 1, wherein the gain-bandwidthproperties of the passive signal paths is adjustable, individually or inaggregate.
 13. The device of claim 1, wherein the passive path includesa capacitive transimpedance amplifier (CTIA).
 14. The device of claim 1,wherein the active path includes a circuit, such as a constant fractiondiscriminator, for correcting variations in event timing resulting fromvariations in signal amplitude.
 15. The device of claim 1, wherein theaddress arbitration control block is comprised of a plurality ofindependent asynchronous sub-arbitrators electrically connected todifferent portions of the pixel array for the purpose of reducing thetime required to determine address locations of events.
 16. The deviceof claim 1, wherein the address arbitration control block reads outactive path signals based on a multi-level hierarchy of processingelements such that processing of signals occurs faster.
 17. The deviceof claim 1, wherein the readout scanner block is comprised of pluralityof sub-decoders, the sub-decoders electrically connected to the passivepaths of the pixels of a separate sub-section of the pixel array, thesub-decoders reading out through separate outputs from the othersub-sections of the array such that time required to readout the passivesignals from the pixelated array is decreased.
 18. The device of claim1, wherein the operation of the row or column arbitration circuit logicis initiated by detection of an event in the active channel of a pixelor pixels in the array.
 19. The device of claim 1, wherein the logic ofthe row or column arbitration circuits is sequenced continually whilethe device is imaging.
 20. The device of claim 1, wherein the detectoris sensitive to electromagnetic radiation regions in the ultraviolet,visible, near-infrared, short infrared, mid-infrared, long infrared, andcombinations thereof including laser-lines within those regions.
 21. Thedevice of claim 1, wherein the imaging device further comprises aprocessor or controller.
 22. The device of claim 21, wherein thecontroller is used to disable the passive path circuitry of a pixel. 23.The device of claim 21, wherein the passive paths are disabled.
 24. Thedevice of claim 21, wherein the controller is used to disable the activepath circuitry of a pixel.
 25. The device of claim 21, wherein thecontroller processes information from the address arbitration controlblock to determine the position of objects in the field of viewreflecting or emitting pulsed electro-optical energy.
 26. The device ofclaim 21, wherein the device is coupled with an electromagneticradiation source.
 27. The imaging device of claim 26, wherein theelectro-optical radiation source is a pulsed laser.
 28. The device ofclaim 21, wherein the device further comprises a timing circuit used tocapture the timing of events detected in the active signal path from oneor more pixels of the array.
 29. The device of claim 28, wherein thetiming circuit is used to determine the timing of outputs from theaddress arbitration control block.
 30. The device of claim 28, whereinthe timing of events detected in the active signal path is used todetermine the time of flight of pulsed electro-optical radiationreturned to the device.
 31. The device of claim 28, wherein the timingof events detected in the active signal path is used to determine thetime between each of a sequence of electromagnetic pulses.
 32. Thedevice of claim 31 wherein the time is used to deduce distance to anobject reflecting the pulsed electro-optical radiation.
 33. The deviceof claim 28, wherein the events captured are used to determine a laserpulse frequency.
 34. The device of claim 21, wherein the data from boththe active paths and the passive paths are used to track a targetemitting or reflecting electro-optical radiation.
 35. The device ofclaim 21, wherein the data from the active paths and the passive pathsis used to orient the output of the optical radiation from a laser. 36.The device of claim 21, wherein the start or end of the passive pathsignal integration time of one or more pixel elements is calculatedbased on the time of events detected in the active path of one or moreof the pixel elements.
 37. The device of claim 21, wherein one or morepixel elements are readout from the passive path signal based on theaddress of events detected in the address arbitration control.
 38. Thedevice of claim 21, where in the controller allows a plurality ofprogrammable operating modes, the modes determining the row and columnorigin of the active signal paths.
 39. The device of claim 21, whereinone or more symbols are superimposed at one or more addresses of thedisplay of the passive path information, wherein the symbols representrange information obtained from return pulses detected in the activepath of the respective pixel at that address.
 40. The device of claim21, wherein one or more symbols are superimposed at one or moreaddresses of the display of the passive path information, wherein thesymbols correspond to the range deduced for objects detected in therespective active path at that address.
 41. The device of claim 21,wherein one or more symbols are superimposed on the display of thepassive path information, wherein the symbols represent the pulserepetition frequency of an optical events detected in the respectiveactive path.